9-22-03
Mr. Kramer, the former director of the Dayan Center for Middle East Studies at Tel Aviv University, is author of Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle East Studies in America.
A year ago, and one week after the launch of
Sandstorm, Daniel Pipes launched another website: Campus Watch. How well I remember. My endorsement
of Campus Watch appeared in its first press release, and since Pipes happened to be
traveling in Canada, I was the one who got inundated with calls from
journalists asking just what Campus Watch intended to do. I dodged
the question: I had endorsed Campus Watch on trust, without knowing
the direction Pipes would take. I knew only that he had invoked my
book, Ivory Towers on Sand, as inspiration
for the project.
It wasn't long before cries of McCarthyism
rolled across the land, as a result of the website's opening gambit:
listing a number of professors with especially egregious records. It
was a wild start. But a year later, and looking back on it, I can
say with certainty (and relief) that my trust in Campus Watch was
vindicated. After the initial wave of publicity and protest, it dropped the list of professors, and began to
provide two invaluable services to the public.
First, the
website has scoured the press, posting everything related to the
Middle East politics of American academe. Until Campus Watch, such
material accumulated only in the files of organizations and
universities. Since Campus Watch, it has been available to anyone.
This has made the site immensely popular, to judge from its ratings. And since the Campus Watch site refers
traffic to Sandstorm (instead of posting), I know from my own
tracker that many of its readers come from universities (dot-edu
domains). I wouldn't be surprised to learn that most people in
Middle Eastern studies rely on the site to follow debates about
their own field and Middle Eastern matters on campus.
Second, Campus Watch has conducted and published its own research.
Many academics feared that Campus Watch
would be engaged in espionage in the classroom, because it invited
students to send it information. But while students may have helped
to alert Campus Watch to problems, the published research of Campus
Watch over the last year has been based upon the on-the-record
speaking and writing of the professors themselves. The research has
been solid and well-documented--the same sort of rigor I try to
practice in this column.
In sum, Campus Watch has provided a
real service and met a genuine need. And regular visitors to the
site cannot but reach the conclusions that animated its launch:
first, that the American campus has become an arena in which some
professors openly propagandize on Middle Eastern issues; and second,
that Middle Eastern studies--the supposed bastion of
objectivity--are no exception. Indeed, on some campuses, they are
the heart of the problem.
Over the year, I was often amazed by the way some academics and students
played up the "menace" of Campus Watch. This reached a disgraceful
culmination at York University in Toronto, where a university
research center disinvited Daniel Pipes on the spurious grounds
that Campus Watch somehow threatened academic freedom. It reached a
comic apogee in the completely bogus claim by a UCLA professor that he had been listed
by Campus Watch--a crass bid for the sympathy of his fellows. Those
criticized by Campus Watch suffered, at worst, bouts of email
spamming (quelle horreur!), but charges of McCarthyism and
cries of "Down with Campus Watch!" became the convenient rallying
cry for a wide range of campus opportunists and poseurs.
The
fact is that Campus Watch plays within the rules of legitimate
give-and-take. Its gloves are off, but it doesn't slug beneath the
belt. And it more than proved its worth in its first year. That's
because in the build-up to the Iraq war, many professors said and
wrote things that perfectly exemplified their complete detachment
from the realities of the Middle East and American politics. The
statements that caught the headlines--such as the hope expressed by a Columbia professor that "a thousand
Mogadishus" befall U.S. forces in Iraq--were not isolated blurtings
by way-out extremists. They were extrapolations of ideas and arguments generated by professors in Middle Eastern
studies. Thanks to the reporting of Campus Watch, it was possible to
see patterns in this patter.
The next step for Campus Watch
is to move beyond criticism to foster new alternatives within Middle
Eastern studies. Students often write to me, asking where they
should study to escape the rigid conformism of the field. The
question has no easy answer, but I intend to formulate one, and
Sandstorm will be making some endorsements this year. Daniel
Pipes, who has taken a seat on the board of the United States Institute of Peace, is
now positioned to legitimize and support alternatives in scholarly
research. Campus Watch has set its ultimate goal as "the improvement
of Middle Eastern studies." Achieving that will take more than
watching for bias. It means watching for promise too.